This is a brisk, immensely enjoyable updating of the private eye and
noir genres. When we first meet Neal Carey he's a graduate student
at Columbia, working on a degree in 18th Century English Literature.
But then he receives a call from his "Dad," Joe Graham, who turns out to
be the one-armed dwarf who sort of adopted Neal when he was eleven years
old and running the streets. A series of flashbacks shows Graham
teaching Neal how to survive and grooming him for an eventual position
trouble shooting for a shadowy organization called Friends of the Family,
who look after the interests of the wealthy clients of the Kitteridge family
bank in Providence, RI. Over the years, Neal learned everything from
how to tail people to how to search a room without anyone ever knowing,
and in the course of these unusual studies, Joe realized that Neal was
a gifted student. Eventually the Friends send him to school, but
now they need him for a special assignment.

It's 1976 and with Jimmy Carter likely to win the Democratic presidential
nomination, he's expected to look for a northern running mate. Senator
John Chase of Rhode Island has a decent shot at the job, but there's one
significant skeleton in his closet : his troublesome teenage daughter has
run away to London. Now it's up to Neal to go find her and bring
her back in time for the Convention.

Neal is a streetwise and sassy hero, which makes for plenty of snappy
banter. And the London he arrives in is in the midst of the birth
of punk rock, which provides an unusually anarchic backdrop to the action.
Add in a priceless first edition of Tobias Smollett's The Adventures
of Peregrine Pickle and a double-crosser within the Friends and you've
got a mystery that cleverly mixes elements of classic noir with various
innovations of the author's own. Imagine Oliver Twist by way
of Raymond Chandler with a soundtrack by The Clash, and you'll capture
something of the spirit of the story. It all makes for great fun
and I look forward to reading the subsequent books in the series.